How Did Margaret Sanger A Powerful Figure In The Early 20th Century

633 Words3 Pages

Margaret Sanger; mother, nurse, founder of Planned Parenthood, and unyielding leader in the fight for birth control and women’s rights in the early 20th century. Her experiences throughout life taught her necessary leadership skills as she helped to move the United States towards a brighter future for women, children, and men alike.
Sanger helped defeat many ingrained customs, such as having excessive amounts of children and helped to reduce poverty in areas that it was typically prominent in despite the closed-mindedness of the early 1900’s.
Margaret’s compassion, open-mindedness, and integrity is what made her such a powerful figure in the 20th century.
Margaret was very compassionate about what she was doing. Her reason was her mother, Anne Higgins who died at the age 49 due to tuberculosis which Margaret believed was a result from stress from living under poverty, birthing eleven children, and having …show more content…

Her compassion pushed her to take a stand, and fight for birth control for these women so that they could lead better and more fulfilling lives.
Margaret believed that forcing women to undergo life-threatening births, and having children that they could not care for was essentially murder to both mother and children.
Ironically Margaret’s mother was a devoted catholic, which in most cases because of Catholic faith often rejects birth control and views it as sinful, and Margaret fought for it to be allowed in the United States. Margaret noticed while working as a nurse that if women became pregnant and realized that they could not afford the child, they would seek abortions in unsanitary clinics and often became injured or worse in the process. Not providing access to birth control was essentially murder to women and children in the early 20th century, and Margaret fought to change

Open Document